What objectively cheesy trope can you not get enough of I'll start -- when a longrunning TV series finally reaches its conclusion, and as part of the final episode we suddenly hear a reprise of the theme song with a new verse we've never heard before
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This trope is super badass on its own merits But it's even better when it makes sense, like when the point of the theme song is to pose a question, and the implication of the reprise is that the question is finally going to be answered, just before the climactic final battle
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(Yeah I know I'm really just talking about Cowboy Bebop)
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Replying to @arthur_affect
On the soundtracks I'm pretty sure the finale version is a straight-up different song. Still counts and still rules though. I do love the trope of incorporating the theme song into the finale in general
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Replying to @LuigiHann
Well that's what I mean Like playing the theme song during the episode itself is fine, but it what sends it over the top is making it a *new version* of the theme song, with new lyrics or a new bridge or a cover in a different style or whatever
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Replying to @arthur_affect @LuigiHann
What gets me is that "The Real Folk Blues" is the *end credits* theme of Cowboy Bebop Which means its "early" appearance in the form of "See You Space Cowboy" (which is thus also the ending tag appearing early) is the show has already ended at this point
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Replying to @arthur_affect @LuigiHann
They're going to show us the final battle because they know we demand it But from Spike's perspective, what actually happens in the battle -- whether he or Vicious lives or dies -- isn't important The story is already over; the decision to go back and face him is what matters
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The whole story from his perspective has been one big question mark -- who is he, what kind of man is he, what does he stand for, if anything, in the end And in this moment, it's been answered
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